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6-letter words containing u, l, e

  • duplet — Chemistry. two electrons occupying the same orbital in an atom or molecule; two electrons working together, especially forming a nonpolar covalent bond between atoms.
  • duplex — duplex apartment.
  • earful — an outpouring of oral information or advice, especially when given without solicitation.
  • ecclus — Ecclesiasticus
  • efflux — outward flow, as of water.
  • elbrus — a mountain in SW Russia, on the border with Georgia, in the Caucasus Mountains, with two extinct volcanic peaks: the highest mountain in Europe. Height: 5642 m (18 510 ft)
  • eluant — Alternative spelling of eluent.
  • Éluard — Paul (pɔl), real name Eugène-Émile-Paul Grindel. 1895–1952, French surrealist poet, noted for his political and love poems
  • eluate — A solution obtained by elution.
  • eluded — Simple past tense and past participle of elude.
  • eluder — Agent noun of elude; one who eludes.
  • eludes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of elude.
  • eluent — (analytical chemistry) In chromatography, a solvent used in order to effect separation by elution.
  • eluted — Simple past tense and past participle of elute.
  • elutor — a vessel used for elution
  • eluvia — Plural form of eluvium.
  • emulge — to drain liquid from
  • englut — To swallow; to swallow up, engulf.
  • engulf — (of a natural force ) sweep over (something) so as to surround or cover it completely.
  • ensoul — Endow with a soul.
  • epaule — The shoulder of a bastion, or the place where its face and flank meet and form the angle, called the angle of the shoulder.
  • epulis — (medicine) A hard tumour developed from the gums.
  • equali — pieces for a group of instruments of the same kind
  • equall — Obsolete spelling of equal.
  • equals — The symbol =.
  • euclid — (language)   (Named after the Greek geometer, fl ca 300 BC.) A Pascal descendant for development of verifiable system software. No goto, no side effects, no global assignments, no functional arguments, no nested procedures, no floats, no enumeration types. Pointers are treated as indices of special arrays called collections. To prevent aliasing, Euclid forbids any overlap in the list of actual parameters of a procedure. Each procedure gives an imports list, and the compiler determines the identifiers that are implicitly imported. Iterators. Ottawa Euclid is a variant.
  • eulisp — 1985-present. A Lisp dialect intended to be a common European standard, with influences from Common LISP, Le LISP, Scheme and T. First-class functions, classes and continuations, both static scope and dynamic scope, modules, support for parallelism. The class system (TELOS) incorporates ideas from CLOS, ObjVLisp and Oaklisp. See also Feel. E-mail: <[email protected]>.
  • eulogy — A speech or piece of writing that praises someone or something highly, typically someone who has just died.
  • évolué — (in the former African colonies of Belgium and France) an African person educated according to European principles
  • evulse — to pluck out; to remove by force
  • exults — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of exult.
  • eyeful — A long, steady look at something.
  • fecula — fecal matter, especially of insects.
  • ferula — Botany. any of various plants belonging to the genus Ferula, of the parsley family, chiefly of the Mediterranean region and central Asia, generally tall and coarse with dissected leaves, many of the Asian species yielding strongly scented, medicinal gum resins.
  • ferule — a ring or cap, usually of metal, put around the end of a post, cane, or the like, to prevent splitting.
  • feudal — of, relating to, or like the feudal system, or its political, military, social, and economic structure.
  • fleury — terminating in fleurs-de-lis: a cross fleury.
  • flexus — (astronomy, geology) A low, curvilinear ridge with a scalloped pattern.
  • flouse — to splash or make a splash
  • fluate — a former name for fluoride
  • fluent — spoken or written with ease: fluent French.
  • flugel — a harpsichord in the 18th and early 19th centuries or a grand piano in the late 19th century
  • fluked — Having flukes.
  • flukes — Plural form of fluke.
  • flukey — fluky.
  • flumed — a deep narrow defile containing a mountain stream or torrent.
  • flumes — Plural form of flume.
  • fluted — fine, clear, and mellow; flutelike: fluted notes.
  • fluter — a person who makes flutings.
  • flutes — Plural form of flute.
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